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Stat: Air Travel Up 8.2 Percent in July

Sep 8, 2015 5:51am

Demand for air travel continued to be robust in July, according to new data from the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

According to the IATA results for July, total revenue passenger kilometers (RPKs) rose 8.2 percent, which was an improvement on the June year-over-year increase of 5.5 percent. July capacity (available seat kilometers or ASKs) increased by 6.5 percent, and load factor rose 1.4 percentage points to 83.6 percent.

Results were given a boost by the timing of Ramadan, which fell partly in July this year but took place mostly in July in 2014, the IATA said. The holy month tends to subdue demand for air travel.

International Passenger Markets

July international passenger demand rose 8.6 percent compared to the same month in 2014, with airlines in all regions recording growth, including Africa for the first time this year. Total capacity climbed 6.5 percent, pushing load factor up 1.6 percentage points to 83.5 percent.

North American airlines’ traffic rose 5.3 percent compared to July a year ago, which was more than double the 2.6 percent rise achieved in June year over year. Capacity climbed 3.5 percent and load factor rose 1.4 percentage points to 86.5 percent. Expectations for better economic performance are supporting travel demand.

Middle East carriers experienced a 19.8 percent demand surge in July over the same month in 2014 buoyed by the timing of Ramadan. Capacity rose 17.7 percent and load factor climbed 1.5 percentage points to 79.6 percent.

Latin American airlines’ July traffic climbed 8.5 percent compared to July 2014. Capacity increased by 8.0 percent and load factor rose 0.4 percentage points to 82.7 percent. Despite recessionary conditions in Brazil and Argentina, trade volumes in the region showed strong improvement during the first half of the year, providing a boost to business-related international travel.

African airlines’ traffic moved into positive territory for the first time this year, rising 4.9 percent in July over July 2014. However, the result could be owing to volatility in reported volumes, as fundamental economic drivers remain weak. Capacity rose 3.9 percent, with the result that load factor improved 0.6 percentage points to 70.9 percent.

India’s domestic demand soared 28.1 percent in July compared to a year ago likely owing to significant increases in service frequencies and improvements in economic growth.

China domestic traffic climbed 10.9 percent year-over-year. Recent developments in the Chinese economy, including deep declines in the country’s stock exchange, have increased concerns about a further slowdown in the economy.